The tingling of bells serves as a warning for this chilling tale. When I read this story, I could so vividly imagine the setting to a point what it felt as if I were there! It is a tale of witchcraft and a reminder that if a sign says to leave, you would do wellContinue reading “Meet The Author: Jessica Nettles”
Tag Archives: indie author
Meet The Author: Nicole Henning
The howling you hear is from Nicole Henning’s terrifying werewolf story, Under the Moon. This story is as sexy as it is intense, with twists and turns that I didn’t see coming. Grab a cup of coffee and let’s get to the interview. Q (Crone Girls Press): Author Interview Question 1: What drove your storyContinue reading “Meet The Author: Nicole Henning”
Meet the Author: Shannon Scott
This story wasn’t about violence as much as its aftermath. How do you pick up the pieces? How do you move on?
Meet the Author: Cristel Orrand
“I think writers are always collecting experiences that we draw from when the time is right. For this story, it was the pandemic–watching people struggle with isolation and adapting communication, that was the catalyst. In other words, I blame Zoom.” ~Cristel Orrand, “M.O.U.T.H. Piece”
Meet the Author: Jennifer Nestojko
“Empathy is one of the most necessary human traits, and the last few years have demonstrated that need… However, it can be possible to lose oneself under the weight sorrow and pain that people endure every day.” ~Jennifer Nestojko, “Found and Lost”
Meet the Author: C. Patrick Neagle
“…horror fiction (and games) gives us a way to deal with real horrors — horrors that can often seem unmanageable, un-understandable, and unconquerable.”
Meet the Author: Rachel Unger
Ultimately, my interests as a writer come back to my interests as a reader. I’m writing because I want to know the why or how behind something, trying to explain it to myself.
Meet the Author: Elizabeth Donald
A horror writer isn’t necessarily an emotional sadist, but it helps! If I make a reader cry, or afraid, or laugh, or any strong emotional response, I win. The enemy of good fiction is boredom.
Meet the Author: Gustavo Bondoni
This is the genre where leaving bodies lying all over the place at the end is not frowned upon but actually welcome!
Meet the Author: Adam Stemple
I like the genre because it doesn’t always have good outcomes. Sometimes when you write characters into bad situations, they don’t get out of it. And that’s ok in the genre. It means that as a reader, you know the stakes are always real.
